Take, for example, billionaire conservative and Rick "Kiss the dead fetus, kids!" Santorum fanboy Foster Friess, who kindly explained to us dumb broads that we don't need actual birth control, because an aspirin between the knees will do the trick just fine.
Apparently, he has yet to recover from his shock:
'I am absolutely stunned how the Democrats were able to somehow say that the Republicans had a war on women. ' What was the war on women? They tried convince that somehow Santorum was going to do this, that Republicans were against contraception,' he said. 'Hugh Hefner said, this guy Friess wants to reverse the sexual revolution. Well, I have four kids. They're two years apart. And contraception's been very, very good to me.' [...]Hard to believe women didn't vote for Republicans, isn't it?'And so how the Democrats got away with this, I think, is another indication of a flaw of the Republicans. No one confronted that. No one confronted that and said this is a bald-faced demagoguery. But a lot of the women out there, they, you know, they were, I guess ' what's the proper word I want to use ' seduced ' that this a war on women.' [...]
'That message,' said Friess, 'took advantage of all the low-information women voters out there who just follow Joy Behar, and had no idea that Rick Santorum ' and Mother Theresa ' believe that contraception goes against the Bible's teaching.'
No comments:
Post a Comment